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John David Reuben

The Importance Of Focus As You Penetrate The US

Are you spending too much time on the road? Then your start-up may be suffering
People view the sunrise at the newly built One World Observatory at One World Trade Center on the day it opens to the public on May 29, 2015 in New York City. (Spencer Platt/Getty Images/AFP)
People view the sunrise at the newly built One World Observatory at One World Trade Center on the day it opens to the public on May 29, 2015 in New York City. (Spencer Platt/Getty Images/AFP)
FirstStrike LLC www.firststrikesales.us
FirstStrike LLC
www.firststrikesales.us

When you’ve worked at as many small startups as I have you learn to pay particular attention to mistakes that seriously compromise revenue and/or greatly increase the cost of sales. I cannot think of anything that can impact initial success than a lack of focus.

So what should you focus on? Two critical areas I will focus on are geography and vertical markets. This is particularly applicable for companies providing enterprise class offerings that require onsite sales attention.

If you are spending more time in the plane, train, and automobile than in front of prospects you are wasting a lot of time and money. Since these are the two most finite resources a startup has it only stands to reason to be extremely diligent about protecting them. A good place to start is by minimizing activities that are not in front of your prospects like travel for example.

A new startup in the United States with a $2,000,000 million goal should think seriously about focusing on the east coast. The greater New York City market dwarfs some countries relative to opportunity and can be navigated by train. Its the only place in the USA where you can do six sales calls and still have time for an early cocktail before a business dinner. Even if you expand that to include NYC, New Jersey, Southern Connecticut and Philadelphia you are still within a two hour radius. Contrast this with a territory that requires multi city trips with airfare, hotel, extensive travel time and a great deal of wear and tear on your personnel.

Focus does not just include geographical. Its important to consider minimizing the learning curve from one account to the other. There is an expression called “cherry picking” which folks love to use when they advocate selling throughout the US right out of the gate. The defense is talking about more leads and opportunities to choose from. This is true but I feel the benefit is more than offset by travel time and costs in my opinion. This also does not take into account the cultural learning curve of covering the US. We are a more homogeneous territory than Europe but you wouldn’t know it flying from Boston to New Orleans. I’d start in the northeast both because of demographics and cultural similarities to Israel’s. In addition NYC is only seven hours behind Israel as opposed to ten hours in California and really can pay dividends in terms of reduced burnout both in Israel and the US.

Another area that is greatly underestimated is that of industry focus. Most IT enterprise software offerings are meant to serve a horizontal market so it’s easy to justify going after every opportunity in a geographical territory. Consider the significant benefits of a smaller, more manageable, territory and using common industry terminology wherever you go. Everyone in a given industry typically uses the same vocabulary and very similar organizational structure. They also strongly prefer buying from a vendor that has references in their line of business. Understanding these characteristics can greatly offset the cultural divide of language, accent, and personality that can be challenging for foreign companies.

We all don’t have products that are a great fit for financial services in New York City but just taking these factors into account can make a huge difference. Disregarding them completely can be a major reason you don’t get off to the start you’d like. Time is money and your most important resource is time. Don’t waste either on a plane or learning new industry jargon every week. Focus on the number and the most efficient way to get there. Time is money and money is time!

About the Author
John Reuben is Managing Director at FirstStrike LLC which specializes in helping Israeli companies penetrate the US market. John has over thirty years experience of identifying, managing and successfully executing on sales processes to large enterprises while building firm customer relationships. His successes include initial sales efforts for companies as large as Oracle and small as three people like Kintana, resulting in very successful outcomes.
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